Geoffrey Edelsten

Geoffrey Edelsten
Born Geoffrey Walter Edelsten
(1943-05-02) 2 May 1943
Melbourne, Victoria
Residence Melbourne, Victoria
Education Mount Scopus Memorial College
Princes Hill Secondary College
Alma mater University of Melbourne
Occupation
Years active 1966–present
Net worth Decrease $63 Million AUD (2012) [1]
Bankrupt (in United States)
Religion Judaism
Spouse(s)
Partner(s) Isabel Beard (1989-1990) [2]
Children One son
Website geoffedelsten.com.au

Geoffrey Walter Edelsten (born 2 May 1943) is an Australian medical entrepreneur who founded Allied Medical Group.

Edelsten was a general practitioner, but was deregistered in New South Wales in 1988 and later in Victoria. In 1990, he was jailed for perverting the course of justice and soliciting Christopher Dale Flannery to assault a former patient.[3][4][5]

In the 1980s, Edelsten's unconventional clinics and lifestyle attracted media attention.[6] He owned mansions, helicopters, and a fleet of Rolls-Royces and Lamborghinis with license plates such as Macho, Spunky and Sexy.[7] His multidisciplinary clinics – the forerunners of modern corporate medical practices – were open 24 hours, and were fitted with chandeliers, grand pianos, and mink-covered examination tables.[8]

In 2005, Edelsten and a business partner founded Allied Medical Group, which by 2010 administered 17 medical centres and employed around 250 general practitioners.[9][10] Edelsten is not, however, a shareholder or owner of the company.[11]

Edelsten was the first private owner of a major Australian football team – the Sydney Swans Football Club, which he bought in 1985.[12]

Early life

Edelsten was born in Carlton, an inner suburb of Melbourne, on 2 May 1943. He attended Princes Hill Public School and, in 1960, matriculated from Mount Scopus Memorial College, Australia's first Jewish co-educational school. He went on to study at the University of Melbourne, graduating with a Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery degree in 1966.

Music career

In the 1960s, Edelsten owned a Melbourne-based record company, Hit Productions, which worked with music publishers Festival Records. During the same period, his family owned the Edels record retail chain.[13]

In 1966, Edelsten was credited for co-writing the songs "I can't stop loving you, baby" and "A woman of gradual decline" for the group the Last Straws, whose singles were released on his short-lived Scope label.[14][15]

In 1967, Hit Productions signed the group Cam-Pact, whose debut single, "Something Easy"/"Michael", charted in Melbourne in early 1968.[13] Later in 1968, Edelsten co-produced the single "Love Machine" for the studio group Pastoral Symphony, comprising Glenn Shorrock and his band the Twilights, Ronnie Charles of the Groop and various other musicians.[16]

Medical career

Following his graduation in 1966, Edelsten practised as a resident medical officer at the Royal Melbourne Hospital before entering general practice. As a general practitioner, he worked in remote rural regions of New South Wales and Queensland, including the towns of Wauchope, Aramac and Walgett, where he bought his first private practice. He obtained a private pilot's licence in order to provide medical services to remote communities – often at no cost to patients when they could not afford to pay.[17]

In 1969, he and a colleague set up a new medical practice in the Sydney suburb of Coogee. After training an assistant doctor to perform the work in Walgett, Edelsten devoted more time to the Sydney practice, which soon expanded to Liverpool.[17]

In 1971, Edelsten and a colleague, Tom Wenkart, launched Preventicare,[18][19] a Sydney-based company providing diagnostic tests and computerised history-taking for doctors throughout Australia, using new equipment from the United States which could quickly and cheaply process pathology specimens.[20][21] Preventicare quickly incurred debts, because some of its operations were economically unsound, and because of the slow payment of patients' accounts totalling far more than the company's debts.[20] In July 1971, the Equity Court appointed a provisional liquidator to act as a temporary business manager to put the company's financial affairs in order.[20] Later that year, the General Manager of Preventicare, Brian Wickens, reported that the organisation was on a sound financial footing.[21] By 1975 – and under the new name of Morlea Pathology Services – it recorded annual profits of $2.5 million to $3 million.[18] Macquarie Professional Services is the successor to Preventicare.[18] During this period, Edelsten and his colleagues established eight practices in the Sydney area, and performed obstetrics at three western Sydney hospitals.[17] After three years in Los Angeles, California, Edelsten returned to Australia in 1978 to resume his general practice, surgical and obstetric commitments.

Following the establishment of Medicare by the Hawke government in February 1984, Edelsten began to run innovative and multi-disciplinary 24-hour medical centres which were the forerunners of modern corporate medical practices.[8] Decorated with chandeliers, white grand pianos and mink-covered examination tables, the clinics attracted considerable media attention.[6][8][22] Edelsten's clinics were the first in Australia to bulk-bill patients to Medicare so that they incurred no direct cost.[17][23] Within four months of opening, the first clinic was dealing with 2,000 patients every week. Edelsten eventually owned thirteen medical centres, in which approximately 20,000 patients consulted 200 doctors every week.[24]

Sydney Swans

On 31 July 1985, Edelsten became the first private owner of a major Australian football team – the Sydney Swans.[12]

In July 1986, Edelsten tried to buy the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks rugby league team, but his offer was refused by the game's administrators.[25][26]

Edelsten is a long-term benefactor of the Carlton Football Club and in March 2013 the club awarded him life membership.[27][28]

Late 1980s and onward

In 1988, New South Wales removed Edelsten from its medical register for using unqualified staff for laser surgery.[29][30]

In 1990, he was convicted for perverting the course of justice and soliciting Christopher Dale Flannery to assault a former patient.[31] The evidence used to convict Edelsten included a taped telephone conversation in which he and his wife discussed Flannery.[7] Edelsten provided a medical certificate stating that Flannery was unfit to stand trial because of an infection following tattoo removal surgery. The trial was adjourned.[7][32] Edelsten was jailed for one year.[3][8] Edelsten and Flannery's wife testified at a Victorian Medical Board hearing that Flannery was ill and in hospital and that he had no contact with Edelsten before or at the time of the assault.[33]

In 1992, New South Wales politician Fred Nile told Parliament that since Edelsten's deregistration in the state, he had relocated to Victoria where he could practise medicine.[34] Edelsten was subsequently removed from the Victorian medical register.[35]

In 2001, Edelsten launched "Gene E", a company offering paternity testing by mail order. The service advertised on late-night television. Customers telephoned for a testing kit, which the company mailed to them. In five working days of receiving the completed test, the company returned the results to the customer by post.[36]

Edelsten has sought readmittance as a doctor in New South Wales.[37] In 2003, he told the NSW Medical Tribunal that he regretted his conduct and expressed remorse.[38] Referring to his doctorate in philosophy from Pacific Western University, counsel assisting the Tribunal claimed that people could be misled by the words "professor" and "doctor" into thinking Edelsten could practise medicine. Edelsten told the commission that he would no longer use the doctor honorific if necessary.[37] In 2004, the same tribunal banned Edelsten from applying again for four years.[39][40]

In 2005, Edelsten and a business partner founded Allied Medical Group.[11] Allied Medical Group employs approximately 250 general practitioners,[9] and runs seventeen "Superclinics" in Victoria, three in Queensland, and one in South Australia.[41] The clinics offer extended opening hours and bulk-billing for patients to Medicare for most services, so that the patient incurs no direct cost.[42] Following the Australian government's 2008 decision to open "GP Super Clinics" in 31 locations across the nation, Edelsten challenged the Department of Health's use of the word "superclinic", which he claimed to be a registered trademark belonging to Allied Medical Group.[43] In 2011, Allied Medical Group was sold to Sonic Healthcare, in a deal worth up to $200 million.[44]

In January 2014, Edelsten filed for bankruptcy in the United States. His Australian lawyers said this was a strategy to "better realise the investments made in the US".[45][46]

In 2015, Edelsten is a contestant in the fourth season of The Celebrity Apprentice Australia.[47]

Personal life

"Twenty minutes before the game the now famous pink and white helicopter circled the arena ...", from the television program VFL 1985: Geoff Edelsten buys Sydney Swans.[48]

Edelsten met and married his first wife, Leanne Nesbitt, in the early 1980s. She was 19 years old and working as a model. During this period, his flamboyant lifestyle attracted media attention – he owned mansions, a football team, a fleet of Rolls-Royces and Lamborghinis with license plates such as Macho, Spunky and Sexy,[7] and was associated, in the media (see screenshot), with a pink helicopter (although Edelsten and his wife insisted, in later interviews, that their helicopter was in fact blue and white).[7][48][49][50][51][52][53] The couple was divorced after three years of marriage.

Edelsten's second wife Brynne

In January 2009, Edelsten announced his intention to marry Brynne Gordon,[54] a 25-year-old fitness instructor from California.[55][56] They were married on Sunday 29 November 2009, in Melbourne's Crown Casino. The wedding was alleged to have cost approximately $3 million and featured a helicopter, a Bentley, 550 guests, circus performers and performances by Tom Burlinson and other headline acts. Guests received a pre-wedding DVD about Edelsten and Gordon featuring narration by actor Jason Alexander, who gave an address at the wedding. Fran Drescher, from The Nanny, also attended – although neither Alexander nor Drescher knew the couple.[57] Brynne Edelsten subsequently appeared in Series 11 of Dancing with the Stars,[58] from which she was eliminated on 12 June 2011.[59]

In June 2012, thieves stole luxury cars belonging to Edelsten, worth more than $1.4 million. Among them was a Lamborghini Aventador worth approximately $800,000 – one of only a handful of Aventadors in Australia.[60]

In January 2014, it was announced that Edelsten's marriage to Brynne was over. Brynne cited "her publicity-obsessed husband for a reported dalliance with another woman more than 18 months ago".[61]

In July 2014 it was announced that Edelsten intended to marry Gabi Grecko, who is 46 years younger.[62] Edelsten and Grecko married on 11 June 2015.[63]

Philanthropy

Edelsten requested that guests attending his 2009 wedding not give wedding presents, but donate to the Great Expectations Foundation, a non-profit organisation he founded in 2008, which provides funds to charities including beyondblue, the Royal Children's Hospital and Magen David Adom.[57] More than three years on, many of the charities once linked to Great Expectations had received no funds and, in at least one case, took moves to sever ties with Edelsten's foundation. A Fairfax Media investigation found that at least three charitable and not-for-profit groups had either never received money from Edelsten's foundation, or were unaware their names were being used to fund-raise from the public and wedding guests. They include the Royal Children's Hospital, the Lighthouse Foundation and the American Women's Auxiliary.[64]

References

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  4. Brown, Alex (1 July 2004). "A few regrets but Edelsten is still true Blue". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 21 March 2008.
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    Tribunal deputy chairman John Maguire said while Mr Edelsten might have spent the past 16 years acquiring an impressive array of degrees and doing charitable work, his character was flawed. He was banned from re-applying for re-registration for four years.
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External links

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